Which is more culturally relevant: EASTER, …or Cesar Chavez’ birthday?

My family and I enjoyed ourselves, hosting my sister-in-law’s family after morning mass, while I kept track of the NCAA Hockey tournament. However, only one little unnecessarily political event ruined an otherwise politics-free day, as my brother-in-law and I jumped on the web for a quick hockey update.

Yes, on Easter Sunday: a national holiday and special day of reverence for the overwhelming majority of Americans (both religious and secular), Google chose to make their daily doodle a celebration of the birthday of Cesar Chavez, rather than some sort of recognition of Easter.

And before someone starts saying that I’M being insensitive for thinking this is somewhat upside-down in the relative importance department, none other than Mika “Hard Lefty” Brzezinski even thought this was beyond the pale.

MIKA BRZEZINSKI: “San Jose Mercury News: controversy surrounding the [sic] Google’s home page yesterday, when the company decided to pay tribute to Cesar Chavez instead of the Easter holiday. Sunday was the late California labor leader’s birthday. In a statement Google explained its decision, quote, we enjoy celebrating holidays at Google but as you may imagine it’s difficult for us to –“

SCARBOROUGH: “It’s tough. I mean, you know, 2,000 years. This has been a tossup. Am I not right?”

MARK HALPERIN: “Not quite that long.”

SCARBOROUGH: “Okay. At least since the ’60s.”

SCARBOROUGH: “I think this is sort of one of those–I think this just might be a culture blind spot for our friends at Google.”

BRZEZINSKI: “I think they just screwed up. How about a statement one day that just says “we screwed up”? Who would have a problem with that?”

—–

Just one more entry in the culture war which will likely fly under the radar of 95% of the country. But it’s exactly the kind of thing which needs to be noted and remembered whenever someone says no such war exists, and you’re being paranoid for thinking there is.

Oh, it’s not unexpected and, as a Twitter follower just chided me, it is “a free country”. Nothing against the law about Google’s decision.

It’s exactly that Google did feel it was of more importance for them to choose Chavez over Easter that calls into question where their corporate mindset is. Keep in mind, they had no problem with including every other “holiday” in their doodles, including Arbor Day, Jackie Robinson’s birthday, St. Patrick’s Day and even Frank Zamboni’s birthday (which I obviously thought celebrating the Zamboni’s namesake was pretty cool…).

They have always noted Christmas, as well, although they copped out and used “Happy Holidays” last year, rather than the dreaded “C” word.

I find it funny that anyone could see this as anything OTHER than a political statement. No one would have said “boo” if they’d even noted it in a secular fashion.
But to ignore it altogether seems rather blatant and, dare I say, …”intolerant”.

Gee, JTR, now you got me wondering: we know he and the family went to the Episcopal church to hear that liberal tirade against the Right, but we don’t see any clips of his acknowledgment of his self-created holiday.

I wonder if the Chavez thing involves fasting or incense? Now I’m curious. And it is a religion to the left….

BR….you just hit on something that went mostly unreported in the MSM: the “sermon” by the man in the pulpit where the Obamas attended their Easter service. The “Readers’ Digest” version of the message was “Republicans (which is Leftist “whisper-speak” for “White People”) want to put people of color to the back of the bus.

Yet, the President who supposedly came to unite and not divide, didn’t even have the character to stand up and walk out of what was clearly a politically inspired message.